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Pu-erh · Yunnan

Lao Cha Tou

lǎo chá tóu

老茶头

"Old tea heads" — the dense nuggets that form naturally during ripe pu-erh fermentation, where leaf clumps and sticks together. Rich, sweet and astonishingly long-lasting in the pot.

Region
Yunnan — 800–2000 m
Harvest
Clumps gathered during shou fermentation, then aged
Oxidation
Post-fermented (ripe / shou)
Cultivar
Yunnan broad-leaf (assamica)
Lao Cha Tou

In the cup

Deep and sweet — dark caramel, dried date and a smooth, syrupy body, even mellower than ordinary shou.

What it gives

A warming, grounding cup — smooth, sweet and gentle on the stomach, with the settling character of ripe pu-erh.

Lao Cha Tou — old tea heads — are an accident turned delicacy. During the wo dui fermentation of ripe pu-erh, the pectins in the leaf grow sticky and some of it clumps together into dense little nuggets that the pile-turners set aside. Once a humble by-product, these “tea heads” are now sought out in their own right.

Because the nuggets are so tightly bound, they release slowly and evenly, giving a cup that is richer, sweeter and more syrupy than loose shou, and remarkably enduring — they will keep brewing long after ordinary leaf has faded. Age smooths them further.

In the cup

Rinse the nuggets, then brew hot — they take full boiling — with steeps a touch longer than loose shou, since they open slowly. The liquor is dark and glossy, deep and sweet, with dark caramel and dried date over a smooth, syrupy body. A single portion will give twenty steeps and more.

How to brew

Lao Cha Tou

Water

95–100 °C

Leaf

7 g per 100 ml

Steep

Rinse, then 15–30 s, 20+ steeps

Vessel

Clay pot or gaiwan; nuggets take boiling